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The British Monarchy Miscellany

Page 12

by Alex David

5. Edward V

  12 years, 5 months, 7 days

  Born: 2 Nov 1470. Accession date: 9 Apr 1483

  192

  Breakdown of

  Male-to-Female Monarchs

  in England/Britain

  since 1066

  Listed below and on the next page is a comparison table showing the breakdown of male-to-female monarchs on the English/British throne for different eras: the 951

  years from 1066 to 2017; the two hundred years from 1817 to 2017; and the breakdown for each royal dynasty.

  Note: Years are rounded up for all reigns. Also, the sums for 1066 to 2017 and for the Stuart dynasty do not add up to an equivalent number of years because of the shared reign of William III and Mary II between 1689 and 1694.

  Male

  Female

  From 1066 to 2017

  759 years

  197 years

  From 1817 to 2017

  72 years

  128 years

  193

  Breakdown by dynasty:

  Male

  Female

  Norman

  88 years

  0 years

  Plantagenet

  331 years

  0 years

  (including Lancaster & York)

  Tudor

  68 years

  50 years

  Stuart

  87 years

  17 years

  Hanover

  123 years

  64 years

  Saxe-Coburg-Gotha

  16 years

  0 years

  Windsor

  35 years

  65 years

  194

  English/British Monarchs

  Born Outside England

  Of the 41 monarchs who have sat on the English/British throne since 1066, 14 were born outside England. These monarchs are listed below with their places of birth grouped by country in chronological order.

  Monarch

  Place of Birth

  Born in France:

  William I

  Falaise, Normandy

  Born c.1027/28

  William II

  Normandy

  Born c.1056/60

  (exact location unknown)

  Stephen

  Blois, Loire Valley

  Born c.1092/96

  Henry II

  Le Mans, Loire Valley

  Born 5 Mar 1133

  195

  Monarch

  Place of Birth

  Richard II

  Bordeaux, Aquitaine

  Born 6 Jan 1367

  Edward IV

  Rouen, Normandy

  Born 28 Apr 1442

  Born in Wales:

  Edward II

  Caernarfon, Gwynedd

  Born 25 Apr 1284

  Henry V

  Monmouth, Monmouthshire

  Born 9 Aug 1386

  Henry VII

  Pembroke, Pembrokeshire

  Born 28 Jan 1457

  Born in Scotland:

  James I

  Edinburgh, Lothian

  Born 19 Jun 1566

  Charles I

  Dunfermline, Fife

  Born 19 Nov 1600

  196

  Monarch

  Place of Birth

  Born in The Netherlands:

  William III

  The Hague

  Born 16 Nov 1650

  Born in Germany:

  George I

  Hanover, Lower Saxony

  Born 28 May 1660

  George II

  Hanover, Lower Saxony

  Born 30 Oct 1683

  197

  English/British Monarchs

  Born in the Modern

  Greater London Area

  Of the 41 monarchs who have sat on the English/British throne since 1066, 18 were born in the modern Greater London area (defined as the 32 modern London Boroughs plus the City of London). The list below gives the location of each monarch’s birth within the capital.

  Monarch

  London Location

  Edward I

  Palace of Westminster

  Born 17 Jun 1239

  Edward V

  Westminster Abbey precincts

  Born 2 Nov 1470

  Henry VIII

  Greenwich Palace, Greenwich

  Born 28 Jun 1491

  Edward VI

  Hampton Court Palace, Hampton Court

  Born 12 Oct 1537

  198

  Monarch

  London Location

  Mary I

  Greenwich Palace, Greenwich

  Born 18 Feb 1516

  Elizabeth I

  Greenwich Palace, Greenwich

  Born 7 Sep 1533

  Charles II

  St James’s Palace, St James’s

  Born 29 May 1630

  James II

  St James’s Palace, St James’s

  Born 14 Oct 1633

  Mary II

  St James’s Palace, St James’s

  Born 30 Apr 1662

  Anne

  St James’s Palace, St James’s

  Born 6 Feb 1665

  George III

  Norfolk House, St James’s Square

  Born 4 Jun 1738

  George IV

  St James’s Palace, St James’s

  Born 12 Aug 1762

  William IV

  Buckingham House

  Born 21 Aug 1765 (later rebuilt into Buckingham Palace)

  199

  Victoria

  Kensington Palace, Kensington

  Born 24 May 1819

  Edward VII

  Buckingham Palace

  Born 9 Nov 1841

  George V

  Marlborough House, St James’s

  Born 3 Jun 1865

  Edward VIII

  White Lodge, Richmond Park

  Born 23 Jun 1894

  Elizabeth II

  17 Bruton Street, Mayfair

  Born 21 Apr 1926

  Note: The current first three people in the line of succession—Prince Charles, Prince William and Prince George—have also been born in London.

  200

  Causes of Death

  of Monarchs

  The list below details the causes of death of each

  English/British monarch since William the Conqueror’s in 1087. The list has been compiled from historical records, biographical accounts, and in some cases educated

  guesses and/or interpretation since not every monarch’s exact cause of death is known.

  William I

  Date of death: 9 Sep 1087

  Age at death: c.59-60

  Cause: Internal injuries received while riding a horse during a military siege in France.

  William II

  Date of death: 2 Aug 1100

  Age at death: c.44-46

  Cause: Arrow shot in the heart as an accident during hunting. There is some reason to believe that the

  accident was part of a murder conspiracy.

  201

  Henry I

  Date of death: 1 Dec 1135

  Age at death: c.66-67

  Cause: Food poisoning caused by a surfeit of lampreys, a favourite dish Henry had been specifically advised not to eat.

  Stephen

  Date of death: 25 Oct 1154

  Age at death: c.58-61

  Cause: Stomach/intestinal illness, probably cancer.

  Henry II

  Date of death: 6 Jul 1189

  Age at death: 56

  Cause: Unidentified long-term illness aggravated by physical and emotional stress. Henry died shortly after fighting a rebellion led against him by his sons Richard and John.

  Richard I

  Date of death: 6 Apr 1199

  Age at death: 41

  Cause: Gangrene caused by an arrow in the shoulder received during a castle siege in France.

  202

  John

  Date of death: 19 Oct 1216

  Age at death: 49

  Caus
e: Dysentery caught whilst campaigning against his barons in the First Barons’ War. A spurious legend later arose that he was poisoned by a monk.

  Henry III

  Date of death: 16 Nov 1272

  Age at death: 65

  Cause: Old age

  Edward I

  Date of death: 7 Jul 1307

  Age at death: 68

  Cause: Dysentery caught whilst travelling on military campaign to Scotland.

  Edward II

  Date of death: 21 Sep 1327

  Age at death: 43

  Cause: Murdered after his deposition from the throne, most likely by smothering. The notorious story that he died by having a red-hot poker inserted in his anus only started as a rumour decades after his death.

  203

  Edward III

  Date of death: 21 Jun 1377

  Age at death: 64

  Cause: A series of strokes which progressively weakened him in the last years of his life, the last of which proved fatal.

  Richard II

  Date of death: around 14 Feb 1400

  Age at death: 33

  Cause: Either murdered, likely by smothering, or starved to death after his deposition from the throne.

  Henry IV

  Date of death: 20 Mar 1413

  Age at death: 46

  Cause: Unidentified chronic illnesses, the symptoms of which included a disfiguring skin condition, lower limbs weakness and seizures.

  Henry V

  Date of death: 31 Aug 1422

  Age at death: 36

  Cause: Dysentery caught whilst campaigning in France during the Hundred Years’ War.

  204

  Henry VI

  Date of death: 21 May 1471

  Age at death: 49

  Cause: Murdered in the Tower of London, likely by a blow to the head, after his second deposition from the throne.

  Edward IV

  Date of death: 9 Apr 1483

  Age at death: 40

  Cause: Unidentified sudden illness. Chroniclers report this illness was made worse by years of overindulgence in food and drink.

  Edward V

  Date of death: unknown, likely between Aug-Oct 1483

  Age at death: 12

  Cause: Unknown. He was most probably murdered by smothering, in the Tower of London.

  Richard III

  Date of death: 22 Aug 1485

  Age at death: 32

  Cause: Fatal injuries received in battle against his rival claimant to the throne, Henry Tudor, who became Henry VII.

  205

  Henry VII

  Date of death: 21 Apr 1509

  Age at death: 52

  Cause: Unidentified recurrent respiratory illness, perhaps tuberculosis.

  Henry VIII

  Date of death: 28 Jan 1547

  Age at death: 55

  Cause: Multiple ailments including morbid obesity, blood poisoning from infectious ulcers, and chronic injuries from a jousting accident in 1536. Other suggested

  medical conditions for what caused his death include Type II Diabetes, syphilis, and MacLeod Syndrome.

  Edward VI

  Date of death: 6 Jul 1553

  Age at death: 15

  Cause: Unidentified respiratory illness, most likely tuberculosis.

  Mary I

  Date of death: 17 Nov 1558

  Age at death: 42

  Cause: Influenza. Although Mary I suffered from what is thought to have been a form of gynaecological cancer this was not the direct cause of her death. Chroniclers 206

  report that Mary died of an influenza epidemic that swept through London in the autumn of 1558.

  Elizabeth I

  Date of death: 24 Mar 1603

  Age at death: 69

  Cause: Old age. A bout of depression brought on by the death of old friends caused her health to sink fast in the last few months of her life.

  James I

  Date of death: 27 Mar 1625

  Age at death: 58

  Cause: Multiple ailments including kidney disease, gout, and what seem to have been a series of strokes.

  Charles I

  Date of death: 30 Jan 1649

  Age at death: 48

  Cause: Execution by beheading with an axe, after being found guilty of treason against the people in a

  Parliamentary trial.

  Charles II

  Date of death: 6 Feb 1685

  Age at death: 54

  Cause: Apoplexy brought on by kidney failure. Some attribute the kidney failure to have been the result of the 207

  advanced stages of syphilis infection. In any case, it is very likely that the direct cause of his death was the intensive medical treatment Charles received following his apoplectic fit, which included massive bloodletting, extensive purging, and blistering on much of his body.

  James II

  Date of death: 16 Sep 1701

  Age at death: 67

  Cause: A series of fainting fits and strokes brought on by extreme penitential practices whilst in exile after he lost his throne.

  Mary II

  Date of death: 28 Dec 1694

  Age at death: 32

  Cause: Smallpox

  William III

  Date of death: 8 Mar 1702

  Age at death: 51

  Cause: Pulmonary fever aggravated by a broken collarbone after a fall off a horse two weeks earlier.

  Contrary to popular legend, the fall was not the direct cause of William’s death but rather it weakened his chronic poor respiratory condition that had been present since childhood.

  208

  Anne

  Date of death: 1 Aug 1714

  Age at death: 49

  Cause: Stroke, caused or aggravated by gout, obesity and stress.

  George I

  Date of death: 28 May 1727

  Age at death: 67

  Cause: Stroke whilst travelling by carriage from Britain to Hanover, Germany. George died in the palace of his

  brother, the Prince-Bishop of Osnabruck, in Hanover, and legends says that he departed life in the very bed in which he was born.

  George II

  Date of death: 25 Oct 1760

  Age at death: 77

  Cause: Massive heart attack whilst emptying his bowels after waking up in the morning.

  George III

  Date of death: 29 Jan 1820

  Age at death: 81

  Cause: Old age aggravated by insanity and dementia.

  209

  George IV

  Date of death: 26 Jun 1830

  Age at death: 67

  Cause: Multiple ailments caused by years of overindulgence in food and drink. These included morbid obesity, arteriosclerosis, gout, bladder disease, and overdependence on medical drugs.

  William IV

  Date of death: 20 Jun 1837

  Age at death: 71

  Cause: Heart failure brought on by chronic pulmonary disease.

  Victoria

  Date of death: 22 Jan 1901

  Age at death: 81

  Cause: Old age, aggravated by an inability to sleep and poor appetite in the last weeks of her life.

  Edward VII

  Date of death: 6 May 1910

  Age at death: 68

  Cause: Cardiovascular attack and chronic bronchitis caused by a lifetime of smoking and overindulgence in food and drink.

  210

  George V

  Date of death: 20 Jan 1936

  Age at death: 70

  Cause: Chronic obstructive pulmonary disease caused by life-long smoking. George’s direct cause of death

  however was a fatal dose of mixed cocaine and morphine given to shorten his suffering and hasten his death.

  Edward VIII

  Date of death: 28 May 1972

  Age at death: 77

  Cause: Throat cancer caused by life-long smoking.

 

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